Zadius Sky
The Living Force
Caesarea now has an infrabed!
Wow, that is beautiful.
Congratulations!

Caesarea now has an infrabed!

I think that building the infra-beds for commercial purposes is probably out of the question at this point. However, helping other members in central locations to form groups and build their own for the use of members is not a bad idea.
What would be the other four modalities you consider having most benefited from @Laura?
Anyway, great job! I hope to be able to make one at one point. I think it's a good idea Jones, it also made me think of collaborative workshops. It would change from the infamous 'Make your own bread oven' :)
Am I the only one who's not seeing the pictures posted by Rennaissance?

I have f.lux on my computer and use it continually. However, in the last year, I was having to wear the blue light blocking glasses, also, as within a couple of minutes on the computer without them caused my eyes to ache quite a bit. I realized a couple of weeks ago (or so) that I didn't have the eyes aching anymore and didn't need to wear the blue light blocking glasses! To me, this is fairly huge! My eyes are closed while I lie on the bed for probably 98% of the time, fwiw.

. I designed a PCB with the same dimensions and fitted it with 6 LEDs: 1x660nm, 1x730nm, 2 each 850 and 940nm. The pictures shows an original and a "hacked" one.Sure monotonic, thank you for the interest! Two remarks:Nice work. I've designed a few PCBs myself and am not bad at analog design. Maybe we can collaborate on some project.
Red light is good for relieving inflammation and inflammatory conditions. Interestingly, the literature is rife with reports on improving macular degeneration (the most common cause of blindness in the U.S.) with exposure to red light at 660 nm
. Unfortunately the current solution won’t tolerate much more power and heat – while still touchable now, there is no way it can dissipate twice as much. A PCB with aluminum core would help some, but not much. So I am looking at a wider or longer model (still with a flexible goose-neck) like there are several on ebay or alibaba. Keep in mind that a USB 1.x or 2.0 port on a PC will supply 2.5W at most. Alternatively, typical USB chargers, wall-warts or battery “power blocks” will supply at least 5W.
. Want to give it a try? Opinions?